Pulling Together: Gift of ‘Equality Song’ unites canoe families

Participants in this year’s Pulling Together Canoe Journey wrapped up with the gift of a new song that will bring people together for years to come.

Pulling Together 2018 took place from July 3 to 11, and involved 15 canoe families who travelled from Esquimalt to the shores of Stanley Park.

As the pullers were nearing the end of the eight-day journey, Patrick Aleck of the Stz’uminus and Penelakut nations gifted the group with “the Equality Song” before his canoe family headed home.

Wes Nahanee, the journey’s protocol advisor from Squamish Nation, said the song made a huge impact.

“(Aleck) only travelled a few days with us, but in the longhouse he had more than 200 people singing that song,” Nahanee said on the final day of the journey. “And it brought everyone together even more than those canoes did.”

Aleck said the song came to him while he was at home one day. He works with children in the foster care system, and they helped him to come up with the name and meaning.

“It’s about bringing people together regardless of the colour of your skin,” he said. “It came from my heart and it’s my song, but it’s really our song now, because it has a life of its own.”

Aleck said he tries to bring the Equality Song everywhere he goes and plans to sing it at Tribal Journeys as well. He purposefully gave the song an English name to make it accessible.

“I’m honoured that people love it and I encourage people to continue to sing it, as long as they respect where it came from,” he said.

The annual Pulling Together journey began in 2001 as a way to grow understanding between public service agencies—primarily law enforcement—and Indigenous people. Many youth organizations are also involved.

Tim Rich, an organizer who works with the Vancouver Police Department, said the journey has been transformative to him as a non-Indigenous person.

“It’s one of the coolest experiences I’ve ever had,” said Rich, who has been involved in Pulling Together for the past five years.

“I’ve heard many stories along the journey from people who have had similar experiences. It’s a pretty trans-formative thing.”

Rich said there is a lot of work that needs to be done in the way of reconciliation, but he believes that the journey is part of putting that concept into action.

“I think this is part of the work that needs to be done,” he said. “I’ve paddled on many of these canoes and to be welcomed into peoples’ hearts and minds like this, it’s a pretty amazing gift unto itself.”

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The Salish Sea Sentinel is published by the Naut’sa mawt Tribal Council, incorporated as a non-profit society in 1983 and governed by a board of directors from our eleven member First Nations located around the Salish Sea. About 6,500 people hold membership in our nations.